182 N.E. 63 | NY | 1932
Lead Opinion
These are labor cases in which injunctions have been granted at the suit of proprietors of moving picture theatres, enjoining defendant during the existence of contracts between the Empire State Motion Picture Operators Union, Inc., and each of the respective plaintiffs from doing any act or acts calculated to induce or cause a breach of such contracts; from picketing and patrolling the streets in front of or near the respective theatres, and from committing any act or acts which are calculated to or apt to harm, harass or embarrass the respective plaintiffs in the conduct of their business, and which are calculated to cause persons desiring to enter the theatres to refrain from so doing; from exhibiting any sign or signs and distributing any notices in front of or *408 near said theatres; from suggesting to any person or persons the boycotting of plaintiffs' business; from interfering in any manner above set forth or in any other manner or by any other means with the business, custom or trade of the plaintiffs, or making any false statements respecting the plaintiffs or the plaintiffs' business; from accosting, coercing, intimidating or in any manner interfering with persons employed by the plaintiffs or seeking to enter their employ, from entering or continuing in such employment, or doing any other illegal act in reference thereto.
The word "defendant," as hereinafter used, refers to labor union Local 306.
The real controversy is between Local 306 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators Union of the United States and Canada, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, and a member of the State Federation of Labor and of the Central Trades and Labor Council of Greater New York, and the Empire State Motion Picture Operators' Union, Inc., which is not affiliated with those organizations nor with any other labor union or body. Each plaintiff made a contract with the latter union whereby plaintiff is obliged to employ none other than members of that union as motion picture operators at such plaintiffs' theatre, which contract ran from September 1, 1930, to August 31, 1931. Defendant picketed plaintiffs' theatres with a sign which read: "Owners of this theatre refuse to employ members of Motion Picture Operators Union Local 306, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor." The picketing was peaceful; not accompanied by any acts of violence, trespass or intimidation and the sign truly stated the fact. Unquestionably defendant in picketing these three theatres was actuated by a desire to improve labor conditions as to wages, hours, number of employees and conditions of work, although incidental disadvantage to the employer *409
might result. "Resulting injury [from lawful picketing] is incidental and must be endured." (Exchange Bakery Restaurant,Inc., v. Rifkin,
While the trial court made findings in all three actions that a sign printed in Jewish characters and carried by the pickets was misleading in that it conveyed the idea that union labor was not employed on the premises and also that the purpose of the picketing was in part to destroy plaintiff's business, the judgment was based solely on the ground that the picketing was illegal because its purpose was to induce or cause a breach of the contract between the plaintiffs respectively and the rival union. The Appellate Division, unanimously affirming the judgment, rested its decision on the same ground. It said: "The evidence amply justified the finding that the Empire State Motion Picture Operators Union, Inc., is a bona fide labor union; that there were valid, binding and subsisting contracts of employment for definite periods of time between the plaintiffs and that union at the time the defendant conducted its picketing of the theatres of the plaintiffs, and that this picketing was conducted with knowledge on the part of the defendant of the existence of such contracts. Such orderly picketing with truthful placards was wrongful, although the means employed were otherwise lawful, because such acts were indulged in to attain a wrongful and, therefore, an unlawful purpose, to wit, the breach of contracts of employment for fixed and definite periods of time." (
The Court of Appeals has for many years been disposed to leave the parties to peaceful labor disputes unmolested when economic rather than legal questions were involved. The employer, if threatened in his business life by the violence of the unions or by other wrongful acts might have the aid of the court to preserve himself from damage threatened by recourse to unlawful means, but the right of the workmen to organize to better their condition has been fully recognized. The fact that such action may result in incidental injury to the employer *410
does not in itself constitute a justification for issuing an injunction against such acts. The interests of capital and labor are at times inimical and the courts may not decide controversies between the parties so long as neither resorts to violence, deceit or misrepresentation to bring about desired results. (National Protective Assn. v. Cumming,
The case of Hitchman Coal Coke Co. v. Mitchell
(
The law of the State of New York, as declared by this court, is perhaps more favorable to the defendant than that of the United States Supreme Court or other jurisdictions. The doctrine of theHitchman case as applied to labor disputes by some of our lower courts has never been accepted here, if it has not been specifically rejected. A review of recent cases establishes this fact.
The question whether union tactics, merely persuasive *411 in character, directed to the inducement of a breach of contract for a term are ever justified was expressly reserved in ExchangeBakery Restaurant, Inc., v. Rifkin (supra, p. 267). The court, per ANDREWS, J., said: "Here, however, we do not need to decide whether where the object of the act is to aid in a labor dispute, there is just cause or excuse for such interference with existing contracts, and if not how specific the contract must be, nor how substantial the term of employment contained therein to permit equity to intervene."
In Interborough Rapid Transit Co. v. Lavin (
In Nann v. Raimist (
In Steinkritz Amusement Corp. v. Kaplan (
The judgments should be reversed and the complaint dismissed in each case, with costs in all courts.
Dissenting Opinion
Plaintiff Stillwell Theatre, Inc., maintains a motion picture theatre in Brooklyn. *413 By contract with defendant Local 306 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators Union, based on the principle of collective bargaining, plaintiff employed only members of that union as operators. Under that contract, defendant supplied four operators and two assistants at an aggregate weekly wage of $350. That contract expired August 31, 1930, and plaintiff declined to renew. Instead it contracted with another union, the Empire State Motion Picture Operators, whereby this union agreed, also on the principle of collective bargaining, to supply and has supplied to plaintiff's satisfaction three operatives at an aggregate weekly wage of $155. This contract is with the union, not with individuals, and is for a fixed term. Plaintiff's right to change the personnel of the operators supplied by the union does not authorize it to cancel its contract with the union. For an agreed duration, plaintiff may employ no one except members of this union. Each operative averaged thirty-one and one-half hours per week of six working days. Defendant had knowledge of the terms of this contract between its rival and plaintiff. Within a few days members of Local 306 began and continued to picket the theatre, displayed signs stating that its owners would not employ operators who were members of its union, stopped patrons of the theatre, caused crowds to collect in front of it and interfered with and injured its patronage. All these facts have been found by the trial justice and unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division. Also this finding has been unanimously affirmed: "That the sole purpose of Local 306 in picketing the Stillwell Theatre was to induce the public not to patronize said theatre; to injure and destroy the plaintiff's business and by pressure and coercion compel the plaintiff to breach the contract aforesaid between it and said Empire State Motion Picture Operators Union, Inc., which will not expire until August 31, 1931." On these findings of fact, *414 which are supported by evidence, the Appellate Division unanimously affirmed the judgment enjoining defendant, during the continuance of this contract, from doing any act calculated to induce or cause a breach of it and from picketing and patrolling the streets in front of or near the theatre.
The majority of this court believes that the real controversy lies between two unions. As I view the case, the essential dispute hinges upon the question whether plaintiff as employer must become submissive to the demands of one of these unions or allow its business to drift to ruin. As long as any semblance of liberty of contract continues to be recognized by the law, it seems to me that a duty rests upon the courts to vindicate such a right.
The old agreement with defendant was more favorable to employees than this new contract with its rival, but the one now existing certainly cannot offend a reasonable sense of social justice. Conduct by an employer, whereby its employees have obtained steady employment, subsequent to August, 1930, at an average of eight dollars for a working day of five hours is truly far from unconscionable.
The lucid exposition of the reciprocal rights of employer and employee by Judge ANDREWS in Exchange Bakery Restaurant,Inc., v. Rifkin (
CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG, HUBBS and CROUCH, JJ., concur with POUND, Ch. J.; O'BRIEN, J., dissents in opinion.
Judgments reversed, etc. *417